this post was submitted on 20 Jun 2023
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This is a topic I really like and wanted to share some things about.

  1. The U.S government has admitted to the existence of Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon (UAP). These typically look like flying objects that don't necessarily follow the laws of physics as we know them. They move faster than the speed of sound, but somehow don't create a sonic boom. The Verge: Read the Pentagon’s UFO Report to Congress

  2. This topic has gained infinitely more traction this decade than the 7 decades previously combined. We are getting congress hearings, there are scientific facilities that are genuinely looking for UAP such as The Galileo Project .

  3. There is currently an extremely credible government whistle-blower who claims that the U.S has captured non human space craft. His name is David Grusch and he was allowed by the DOD to supply his classified evidence to Congress to match his claims. Unfortunately, the public does not have access to this. But the UFO community implores it's followers to contact their representatives to force Congress to investigate these claims.

There's so much to this topic and really compelling evidence. There's a few things that are really rock solid: UFOs are here and we the public don't know anything about them. I'd love to hear your thoughts on the topic.

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[–] manitcor@lemmy.intai.tech 3 points 1 year ago

I tend to agree, if I see real extraordinary evidence I'll def re-asses right now it just seems like another one of these dances (people like this come up every few years and its never anything).

More likely situation:

1st world governments esp allies have been developing multiple highly experimental and advanced technologies for decades. The only things that have ever been declassified are the failures and the ones that were unworkable for one reason or another.

The stuff that has worked and is effective has multiple levels of classification placed on it, never to be removed until the asset is no longer tactically valuable.

I don't think there was any specific advancement in hardware tech that allowed us to suddenly balance 4-rotor automated drones. We could have had those in the 60's when you consider what Apollo's nav computer was capable of.

Super quiet toroidal propellers everyone is talking about lately is also an old idea, MIT just put AI on it to make a highly efficient shape.

The point being, we like to think we know what we are capable of technically however the rank and file citizen is never told everything and much is hidden from view.